Garant v. Cashman

66 N.E. 599, 183 Mass. 13, 1903 Mass. LEXIS 696
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 66 N.E. 599 (Garant v. Cashman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garant v. Cashman, 66 N.E. 599, 183 Mass. 13, 1903 Mass. LEXIS 696 (Mass. 1903).

Opinion

Braley, J.

The plaintiff’s intestate while in the employ of the defendants, and at work for them on a coal run or staging handling coal, received injuries from which after a period of conscious suffering he died. The declaration contained four counts, two under St. 1887, c. 270, as amended by Sts. 1892, c. 260, 1893, c. 359,1894, c. 499, now R. L. c. 106, §§ 71-74, and two at common law.

On motion of the defendants specifications were ordered by the judge, and filed by the plaintiff, and the case appears to have been tried and submitted to the jury on the first count and the specifications relating thereto, which alleged in substance the negligence of the defendants to be an insufficient or defective guard or barrier upon the apron or platform of the run or staging where the plaintiff’s intestate was at work at the time of the accident, and which was a part of the ways, works and machinery connected with and used by them in their business.

[15]*15Exceptions were taken and saved by the defendants to the admission of certain evidence as well as to the refusal of the judge to give various rulings requested by them, but only two questions have been argued on their brief, which we consider in the order presented, and treat the other matters as waived.

1. In order for the plaintiff to recover, the burden was on her to show that the defendants’ negligence was the proximate cause of the injury to and death of her intestate.

The ways, works and machinery in the use and control of the defendants at the time consisted of a coal run or staging then being used by them for unloading coal from a vessel. A part of the run was an apron or platform attached to it by hinges where it joined the shears or uprights and which held and supported the apron at one end, and a chain ran from each outer side of the corner of the apron back to and connected with the uprights. This apron, when not in use, was folded up against the shears or uprights, and when in use was let down and lowered to a level with the run, and held in place over the vessel that was being unloaded by the hinges at its base and the chains. On each side of the apron, and a part of it, was a small bench. At the outer side of each bench nearest the chain was a wooden post nailed to the floor of the apron, and also to the side of the bench. A rope about ten feet in length ran from each post to the chain on that side of the apron. These posts were about four feet high and extended some three feet above the top of the benches, and the rope was about even with the hips of the man who stood on the bench when at work. In unloading coal from a vessel the coal was hoisted by buckets, and raised so far above the level of the apron or platform as would allow the bucket to clear the wheelbarrow that was to receive the coal. The “ tippers ” and “ wheelers,” or men who unloaded the coal, stood on these benches, the “ tipper” on the bench to the left and the “ wheeler ” on the bench to the right of the apron, and tipped the contents of the bucket into the barrow. The undisputed evidence shows that this arrangement of posts and ropes was a part of the original construction of the api’on, and was designed for and used as a barrier or guard to secure the safety of the men when at work on the apron, and using the benches, from falling off the platform. ' There was evidence that at the [16]*16time when the defendants assumed the control and maintenance of the run or staging these posts were of iron set into the floor of the apron and secured by a nut which held the post in place, and that a rope about an inch in diameter ran from an eye in each post to the chain on that side of the apron; that at some time afterwards wooden posts were substituted by the defendants for the iron posts, and that these posts were not mortised into the platform or secured by clamps or bolts, but were only attached thereto by being nailed to the floor of the apron and to the top of the bench. This run had been in the control of the defendants, or their firm, for about “ twelve or fifteen years,” and used by them for the purpose of unloading coal “ twenty or thirty times in each year.” About a month before the accident the post that then gave way was drawn out a little at one corner, about half an inch from the plank or floor of the apron, and on the day of the accident, a. few hours before it happened, had been struck by a wheelbarrow and knocked off, and upon each occasion had been set back in place and the nails redriven as before by an employee of the defendants. The plaintiff’s intestate fell against the rope leading from this post to the chain, and from there to the deck of the vessel below, some twenty-two feet. Immediately after, this post was found with the nails drawn out hanging to the platform by the rope.

Upon this evidence taking into consideration the length of time the defendants had been in control of, and used the run or staging, the nature and character of the work required by the men on the apron while engaged in handling coal, the object and purpose of the guard or barrier, the changing from iron posts to wooden posts, the manner in which the latter were fastened, and the condition of the post that gave way, it was for the jury to say whether the defendants in the discharge of their duty to. their employees exercised that care, diligence and supervision over the apron or platform, with its benches, posts and ropes, so that the same was reasonably safe for the plaintiff’s intestate to use in his work, and whether the post that gave way was suitably and securely fastened so as to be sufficient for the use for which it was designed, and to stand the strain to which at any time it might be subjected by the men using it as a barrier and taking hold of it to steady themselves when at work and in order to prevent [17]*17their falling off the apron, and they might well find that the post, either by original construction and adaptation to the apron, or by long continued use, was or had become defective and unsafe, and that reasonable care on the part of the defendants in seeing that the run was kept in proper condition for the use of their servants should have led them to have ascertained and remedied the defect. Rogers v. Ludlow Manuf. Co. 144 Mass. 198, 205. Roughan v. Boston & Lockport Block Co. 161 Mass. 24, 25.

But the defendants contend that the replacing of the post on the morning of the accident by one of their employees was a voluntary service on his part, and not within the scope of his employment, and that if his conduct was negligent and contributed to or caused the accident then the plaintiff cannot recover.

If this question is now open to them, the jury were fully instructed that in so far as the conduct of their employee Martin in resetting and nailing the post on the morning of the day of the accident might have been the sole cause of the injury and death of the plaintiff’s intestate, “ if the defect, if the sole defect which caused the injury came into existence the morning of the injury and a few hours before, and consisted of replacing the post by Martin insecurely, that is not a defect for which the Cashmans are liable. If the only fault that you find in this case, that was the cause of the injury, consists, of the condition of the post when it was replaced by Martín and that was the cause of the injury, the sole cause of the injury, there is not any liability in this case against the Cashman Brothers. It would be a defect or a cause of injury for which the Cashman Brothers were not responsible under any aspect that this suit presents. . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 N.E. 599, 183 Mass. 13, 1903 Mass. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garant-v-cashman-mass-1903.